I'm Fernando Vázquez, a Licensed Clinical Social Worker in Texas (license #115239) with 8 years specializing in immigration psychological evaluations. I provide comprehensive forensic assessments via telehealth for clients throughout Texas, including Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, El Paso, Austin, Fort Worth, and all other Texas cities.
Texas has the second-highest immigration court backlog in the United States, with 426,901 pending cases statewide. With 5.8 million foreign-born residents (18.4% of Texas's population) and a 1,254-mile shared border with Mexico, Texas presents one of the most complex immigration landscapes in the country. I work with immigration attorneys throughout Texas to provide psychological evaluations that document trauma, hardship, and mental health conditions in ways that strengthen legal cases.
I've worked with Texas immigration cases for years, and the state's border context creates unique challenges. Dallas Immigration Court at 1100 Commerce Street has 220,000 pending cases, with hearings being scheduled into 2028. Houston's immigration court at the Mickey Leland Federal Building serves one of the most diverse immigrant populations in the country. San Antonio's court at 800 Dolorosa Street and El Paso's court at 700 E. San Antonio Avenue handle cases along the Texas-Mexico border. These backlogs mean families wait nearly 4 years (1,400+ days average) for hearings while dealing with uncertainty, separation anxiety, and financial hardship.
Texas is home to 5.8 million foreign-born residents, with 78% concentrated in the Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, and Austin metro areas. Mexican nationals represent 50% of Texas's unauthorized immigrant population (1.05 million people), though that share has declined from 73% in 2016 as Central American migration has increased. I'm fluent in Spanish and English, and I understand the cultural context that matters for Mexican, Guatemalan, Honduran, Salvadoran, Venezuelan, and other Latin American immigrant communities throughout Texas.
Texas shares a 1,254-mile border with Mexico, and border enforcement impacts immigration cases throughout the state. Operation Lone Star and S.B. 4 have created additional legal complexities, making it even more critical that psychological evaluations document the full impact of persecution trauma, family separation, and fear of return.
Houston's USCIS asylum office is one of the top three nationally by volume, alongside Miami and Arlington. I conduct comprehensive asylum evaluations that document persecution-related trauma for clients from Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Venezuela, Colombia, Nicaragua, and other countries experiencing violence, political instability, or persecution. My evaluations establish how trauma symptoms corroborate the asylum narrative and meet the credible fear standard.
Over the past 8 years, I've completed hundreds of evaluations for immigration courts, including the Dallas Immigration Court, Houston Immigration Court, San Antonio Immigration Court, El Paso Immigration Court, and USCIS field offices serving Texas. This experience with Texas's diverse immigration landscape gives me insight into what adjudicators expect across different jurisdictions. The cases I work on most frequently include:
I'm licensed to provide telehealth services throughout Texas. This means clients in Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, El Paso, Austin, Fort Worth, Corpus Christi, McAllen, Brownsville, Laredo, and anywhere else in Texas can access my services without traveling to an office.
Texas is massive. The drive from El Paso to Houston is over 700 miles. Families in border cities shouldn't have to drive hours to find a qualified immigration evaluator. Clients in rural Texas or smaller cities can connect via secure video and complete the entire evaluation process remotely. I've completed hundreds of telehealth evaluations with successful case outcomes. What matters isn't whether we meet in person or via video. It's whether the evaluation captures the clinical reality and connects it to what the legal case needs.
I've reviewed evaluations from other providers that barely scratch the surface. Template reports that just repeat the client's story without clinical analysis. Eight-page documents that don't address the legal criteria. Generic statements about meeting immigration requirements without showing how the psychological findings actually connect to extreme hardship or credible fear.
My evaluations are different because they connect clinical findings directly to legal elements. For hardship waivers, I don't just say someone is depressed. I document how that depression creates extreme hardship by affecting parenting capacity, employment stability, or ability to care for elderly relatives. For asylum cases, I don't just diagnose PTSD. I show how trauma symptoms establish the credible fear standard and corroborate the persecution narrative. For VAWA cases, I detail the psychological impact of specific abuse patterns and explain how those patterns fit the legal definition of battery or extreme cruelty.
I also use validated assessment instruments when clinically indicated. The PCL-5 for PTSD screening. Clinical interviews structured around DSM-5 criteria. Collateral document review that incorporates medical records, police reports, and legal filings. The result is a comprehensive evaluation that functions as expert testimony in written form.
Texas has the second-largest Hispanic population in the United States. 78% of Texas's foreign-born population lives in the Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, and Austin metro areas, with Mexican and Central American nationals representing the largest groups. Many of my Texas clients prefer to conduct evaluations in Spanish. I'm fluent in Spanish and conduct the entire evaluation process in the client's preferred language.
This matters because trauma and emotional experiences don't translate well when filtered through an interpreter. When clients can speak directly in their native language, they provide richer clinical detail. They describe emotional states more accurately. They feel more comfortable discussing sensitive topics like domestic violence, persecution, or border trauma. This results in better evaluations that capture the full psychological picture.
I also speak Portuguese and Galician, which helps when working with Brazilian and other Lusophone immigrant communities in Texas.
Evaluations typically take 2-3 hours and include:
I work with immigration attorneys throughout Texas who represent clients in Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, El Paso, and other Texas cities. I understand the pressure of court deadlines, especially with Texas's massive case backlogs (426,901 pending cases statewide, 220,000 in Dallas alone). That's why I offer flexible turnaround options from 15 days down to 24-hour emergency service.
When you refer a client to me, you get:
Texas attorneys handling cases in Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, or El Paso immigration courts face unique challenges due to case backlogs (average 1,400+ day wait times) and border enforcement complexities. I've worked with dozens of Texas immigration attorneys and understand what adjudicators and immigration judges expect in psychological evaluations.
Peer-reviewed research demonstrates that professional psychological evaluations nearly double immigration case success rates. A 2021 study published in the Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine analyzed 2,584 immigration cases and found 81.6% of applicants with forensic evaluations were granted relief, compared to 42.4% without evaluations (Atkinson et al., 2021).
For asylum cases specifically, the impact is even more dramatic. An earlier study in the Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health found 89% of asylum seekers with professional evaluations were granted asylum, compared to 37.5% without (Lustig et al., 2008).
These aren't anecdotal claims. They're findings from peer-reviewed studies analyzing thousands of cases. When you invest in a psychological evaluation, you're investing in an intervention that research shows can nearly double your chances of success.
Sources:
Texas has 426,901 pending immigration cases, the second-highest in the nation after Florida. Dallas alone has 220,000 pending cases, with hearings being scheduled into 2028. These aren't just statistics. They represent hundreds of thousands of families living in uncertainty, often for years, while waiting for case resolution.
This backlog creates its own psychological hardship. Families can't plan for the future. Children grow up not knowing if they'll have to leave the only country they've known. Parents experience chronic anxiety about separation. Employment becomes unstable because of work authorization gaps. The border enforcement environment in Texas adds additional layers of fear and stress. This prolonged uncertainty is a trauma in itself, and I document these impacts in my evaluations.
If your immigration attorney has recommended a psychological evaluation, or you're looking for a Texas-licensed LCSW experienced in immigration cases, contact me for a free 15-minute consultation. We can discuss your case type, turnaround needs, and whether my services align with what your case requires.
I serve clients throughout Texas via telehealth, and I conduct evaluations in English, Spanish, Portuguese, or Galician. Whether your case is in Dallas Immigration Court, Houston Immigration Court, San Antonio Immigration Court, El Paso Immigration Court, or being processed by USCIS field offices anywhere in Texas, I provide evaluations that meet the clinical and legal standards your case needs.
Page Last Updated: January 2026 | Texas LCSW License #115239 | Also Licensed in NJ (#44SC06146200), FL (#TPSW2497), SC (#TLS.359.CP)
15-minute call. No charge. I’ll tell you if an evaluation fits your case , and which type. Attorney inquiries answered within 24 hours.